Prokofiev: Alexander Nevsky / Abbado
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Alexander Nevsky, cantata for mezzo-soprano, chorus & orchestra, Op. 78: No. 1, "Russia under the Mongolian Yoke"
- Alexander Nevsky, cantata for mezzo-soprano, chorus & orchestra, Op. 78: No. 2, "Song about Alexander Nevsky"
- Alexander Nevsky, cantata for mezzo-soprano, chorus & orchestra, Op. 78: No. 3, "The Crusaders in Pskov"
- Alexander Nevsky, cantata for mezzo-soprano, chorus & orchestra, Op. 78: No. 4, "Arise, ye Russian People"
- Alexander Nevsky, cantata for mezzo-soprano, chorus & orchestra, Op. 78: No. 5, "The Battle on Ice"
- Alexander Nevsky, cantata for mezzo-soprano, chorus & orchestra, Op. 78: No. 6, "Field of the Dead"
- Alexander Nevsky, cantata for mezzo-soprano, chorus & orchestra, Op. 78: No. 7, "Alexander's Entry in Pskov"
- Scythian Suite, for orchestra, Op. 20: The Adoration of Veless
- Scythian Suite, for orchestra, Op. 20: The Enemy God and the Dance of the Darkness
- Scythian Suite, for orchestra, Op. 20: Night
- Scythian Suite, for orchestra, Op. 20: The Glorius Departure of Lolly and the Sun's Procession
- Lieutenant Kij�, film score and suite for orchestra, Op. 60: No. 1, "Birth of Kije"
- Lieutenant Kij�, film score and suite for orchestra, Op. 60: No. 2, "Romance"
- Lieutenant Kij�, film score and suite for orchestra, Op. 60: No. 3, "Kije's Wedding"
- Lieutenant Kij�, film score and suite for orchestra, Op. 60: No. 4, "Troika"
- Lieutenant Kij�, film score and suite for orchestra, Op. 60: No. 5, "Burial of Kije"
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #7686 in Music
- Released on: 1996-01-23
- Number of discs: 1
- Dimensions: .21 pounds
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Alexander Nevsky is one of the great film scores, and a beautifully restored edition of the film with a new digitally recorded soundtrack, is now available. Eisenstein's movie was a landmark in the history of the cinema--something like half of it consists of nothing but the great "battle on the ice," and the helmets of the invading crusaders gave George Lucas some ideas for the Storm Trooper costumes in Star Wars. The cantata that Prokofiev fashioned from the complete score has all of the good tunes, but none of action-motivated repetition, and this is its best performance. Combined with the two suites, it makes a stunning Prokofiev disc. --David Hurwitz
Customer Reviews
A breathtaking reading.
At first glance, Soviet music sung by a British Chorus and a Russian Mezzo, played by a British and an American orchestra, conducted by a German trained Italian seems too diverse to succeed, but this recording is not only a success, it's a great success.
Of the recordings on this disk, Alexander Nevsky and Lieutenant Kije both started life as score's for films by Sergei Eisenstein and Alexander Faintsimmer respectively and both were later re-cast into the orchestral works contained on this CD. This is where the similarity ends. A great sense of fun pervades the music through Kije and is carried off with great aplomb by Abbado and his players. I still can't decide if I like this recording or Reiner's more, but both are equally good, so it's really a win - win situation, whatever your final choice.
Nevsky however is a very different piece, at the time when it was being written both Prokofiev and the film's director Eisenstein were seriously out of favour with Stalin, Khrennikov and the sham critics of the time, a poor reception for this film could well have seen both of them deported to a Siberian Gulag like so many millions of others and this sense of brooding fear and paranoia pervades the work, but they got lucky, Stalin liked the work and their fortunes revived because of it. Looking back to Nevsky's campaign of 1242, the piece also succeeds in capturing the atmosphere of the Soviet Union in 1938 and looks forward to the horrors that were to come in the years of war that followed. Yet despite this, it is a work of tremendous power and beauty, I have yet to hear the famous "Battle on Ice" performed with more power or "The Field of the Dead" sung so movingly. Elena Obratzova rises to the occasion magnificently. Let no one tell you that Jarvi or Previn's recordings are preferable to this one.
The Scythian Suite was commissioned by Sergei Diaghelev for his Ballet Russe and shows a young Prokofiev showing just what he was capable of. This work ranks with Stravinsky's Rite of Spring and Bartok's Miraculous Mandarin as one of the most barbaric pieces of music ever written and Abbado gives it full voice in this breathtaking reading.
Essential Prokofiev
The cinematic world would be a far more enjoyable place to venture into if we had more composers who could write film music like Prokofiev could. His foray into the movie world (for Eisenstein's films Ivan the Terrible and Alexander Nevsky) must be considered one of the pinnacles of film music. The cantata Alexander Nevsky is built from material from the film of the same name. Unlike most film music it is more than aptly suited to survive on its own, away from the screen. The other two works on this disc are less than masterworks, but still very entertaining. The Scythian Suite is hardly Prokofiev's genius at work. It was written originally as a ballet (in direct competition with Stravinsky's Rite of Spring) for Diaghilev, but was rejected. He salvaged the music and made the Scythian Suite, which is very violent, primitive, brutal and quite entertaining. Lt. Kije is a fun little piece, it's Romance is particularily delightful. I think you would have a lot of trouble finding a better performance of Nevsky than this one, Abbado's talent is at it's peak here, and the LSO can really belt out the loud moments of this music (and they are VERY loud), without losing their clarity. In short, Nevsky is the kind of music that makes Prokofiev one of my all-time favorite composers.
A prime recommendation for Alexander Nevsky
Abbado's Alexander Nevsky is full-bloodedly idiomatic, metrical and tightly controlled. He captures perfectly the tortured triumph of the closing bars, with its crashing dissonances underlined. The singing could pass for that of a Russian choir and the LSO's playing is spectacular. The slightly analytical sound highlights the angularity of the music making. His Lt. Kije Suite is colorful and amiable and his Scythian Suite, while a bit rhythmically flat-footed in "The Alien God and Dance of the Evil Spirits," has plenty of mystery elsewhere.




